🌡️Options 3/5 — IV and IV Crush Around Earnings
This is part 3 of 5 of the options course. Here lies one of the most expensive traps for beginners: IV crush around earnings. Many people get the direction right, the stock moves after earnings exactly as they expected — and they still lose money. This part explains why.
Reminder: Options can expire worthless and lose 100% of the premium invested. This text is educational and descriptive, not investment advice or an instruction to buy/sell. The numbers are illustrative.
1. What implied volatility (IV) is
IV is a stock's expected "nervousness" — how much movement the market has built into option prices going forward. It isn't history, it's an expectation.
- High IV = the market expects a big move → options are expensive.
- Low IV = the market expects calm → options are cheap.
2. Why IV rises before earnings
Earnings are a scheduled event with an uncertain outcome. The stock often gaps up or down afterwards. The market knows this uncertainty in advance, so before the announcement it prices the expected big move into options — IV jumps. The closer to the date, the more inflated it is.
➤ Consequence: options bought a few days before earnings are expensive. You pay an above-average premium precisely because a big move is expected.
3. IV crush — what happens right after the announcement
Once the results are out, the uncertainty disappears. The market now knows the numbers. IV instantly "deflates" back to normal — and option prices fall with it. This sharp drop in IV is called IV crush.
🎈 Analogy — a deflated balloon. Before the announcement the option is a balloon of inflated vega exposure. The announcement sticks a pin in it. Even if the stock jumps the right way, the air (IV) escapes the option so fast that the falling premium can drag you into the red.
4. A concrete example — being right and still losing
Stock $100, the day before earnings you buy an OTM call with strike $105. Because of high IV you pay an expensive premium, say $4.
- The results are good, the stock jumps to $106. You were right on direction!
- But IV deflated. The option's intrinsic value is now just $1 ($106 − $105), and the time + volatility value you paid for has vanished.
- The option you paid $4 for is suddenly worth maybe $1.50 → a loss, even though the stock went up.
5. The expected move — what's "already paid for"
From option prices (from IV) you can compute the expected move — the band the stock is likely to land in after earnings (roughly ±1σ, where ~68% of cases fall). When the stock finishes inside the expected move, option buyers typically lose (they paid for more than happened). When it finishes beyond it, they can profit.
🎯 Key idea: the market has already "paid" for the expected move in advance. For the buyer to profit, the actual move must be bigger than the one priced into IV — not merely "right".
6. The two sides of IV crush
- Option buyers before earnings face a double risk: expensive IV at purchase + crush after the announcement. To profit they need a move beyond the expected one.
- Option sellers, by contrast, typically profit from the crush — they collected an inflated premium and IV deflates in their favour after the announcement. Careful: selling before earnings is risky, though — a big surprise move in the stock can cause a loss far larger than the premium collected. A high win rate ≠ safety.
7. How to think about IV (descriptively)
- IV rank / IV percentile show whether today's IV is high or low relative to the stock's own history. Traders watch these regimes: cheap options are usually sought when IV is low, expensive ones sold when IV is high — that's a principle, not an instruction for a specific trade.
- Before a known event (earnings), IV is almost always inflated. If you're buying an option purely for direction, expect a crush after the announcement.
- This is not "buy/sell" advice — it's a description of how options behave around earnings, so you aren't surprised.
8. Takeaways
- IV = expected nervousness, not the past. It rises before earnings and falls sharply after (IV crush).
- Being right on direction isn't enough — you must beat the move already priced into expensive IV.
- A beginner most often loses by buying an expensive option the day before earnings, and the crush takes the profit even when the stock jumps the right way.
Next: Part 4 — Assignment and rolling.
---
★ Educational content — not investment advice. Options can lose 100% of the amount invested. Past results do not guarantee future ones. Consult a licensed advisor before any decision.
Want to know more? Ask the QMA AI advisor
The advisor knows the whole platform and its data. If the answer is not in the QMA database, it looks it up and explains it in plain language.
Open the AI advisor →Related articles
Part one of the options course: what a call and a put are, strike, expiration, premium, ITM/OTM. On a $100-stock example we show both the leverage and the risk of a 100% loss — in plain language with analogies.
9 minPart two of the course: Delta, Theta, Vega and Gamma explained in plain language with analogies. What each Greek measures, why theta and vega ruin most beginner purchases, and how to read them together.
10 minPart four of the course: what happens on assignment for a covered call and a cash-secured put, what sequence risk is (small gain, big rare loss), early assignment, and what rolling a position means.
See it live: QMA scores 17,000+ stocks for you
Full access to the 5-pillar analysis, smart-money signals, strategies and the whole-market screener. No commitment, cancel anytime.